Asked by Vanessa
Compare and Contrast Limerick and The Sidewalk Racer
PLEASE HELP ME!!!
PLEASE HELP ME!!!
Answers
Answered by
OlaftheSnowmen
A Limerick uses rhyme. Use the poems below to compare and contrast yourself.
STAR
by Kaitlyn Guenther
There once was a wonderful star
Who thought she would go very far
Until she fell down
And looked like a clown
She knew she would never go far
The Sidewalk Racer
or On the Skateboard
Lillian Morrison
Skimming
an asphalt sea
I swerve, I curve, I
sway, I speed to whirring
sound an inch above the
ground; I’m the sailor
and the sail, I’m the
driver and the wheel
I’m the one and only
single engine
human auto
mobile.
STAR
by Kaitlyn Guenther
There once was a wonderful star
Who thought she would go very far
Until she fell down
And looked like a clown
She knew she would never go far
The Sidewalk Racer
or On the Skateboard
Lillian Morrison
Skimming
an asphalt sea
I swerve, I curve, I
sway, I speed to whirring
sound an inch above the
ground; I’m the sailor
and the sail, I’m the
driver and the wheel
I’m the one and only
single engine
human auto
mobile.
Answered by
Reed
Which limerick? Limerick is a county and city in Ireland. A limerick is a form of poetry.
Answered by
OlaftheSnowmen
I presume on how she was assigned it, that the limerick she words it as means the one using rhyme
Answered by
Reed
The poem "The Sidewalk Racer" is not a limerick.
http://www.writeawriting.com/poetry/limerick
http://www.writeawriting.com/poetry/limerick
Answered by
Reed
Lim·er·ick1.
[ˈlim(ə)rik]
DEFINITION
1.a county in the Republic of Ireland, in the western part of the province of Munster.
•the county town of Limerick, on the Shannon River; pop. 52,539 (2006).
lim·er·ick2.
[ˈlim(ə)rik]
NOUN
1.a humorous, frequently bawdy, verse of three long and two short lines rhyming aabba, popularized by Edward Lear.
ORIGIN
late 19th cent.: said to be from the chorus “Will you come up to Limerick?,” sung between improvised verses at a gathering.
RELATED FORMS
limerick (noun)
limericks (plural noun)
From Oxford Dictionaries
Answered by
OlaftheSnowmen
Okay, but (not my words) A limerick is a silly poem with five lines. They are often funny or nonsensical. Limericks were made famous by Edward Lear, a famous author who wrote the "Book of Nonsense" in the 1800's. This was an entire book of silly limericks.
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